Newspaper Page Text
VOL. C, NO. 24.
trouble in, my friends, that people j culato just how many letters will
do not understand the etides of go- be Bent to the Dead Letter Oflice
ing in del* and that if you pur- every year through misdirection;
chase goods with no expectation of that it is pocsible to calculate just
paying for them, or go into debts how many letters will be detained
which you cannot meet, you steal! for lack of postage-stamps through
just so much money. If I go into
a grocer’s store, and I buy sugars
and coffees and meats, with no ca'
pacity to pay for them, I am more
dishonest than if I go into the
store, and when the grocer’s face is
turned tho other way I till ray
pockets with the articles of mer
chandise anil carry off a ham. In
the one case I take the merchant’s
the forgetfulness of tho senders,
and that it is jxissible to tell just
how many people will fall in the
streets by slipping on un orange-
peel. In other words, there are no
accidents. The most insignificant
event you ever heard of is the link
between two eternities—the eterui-
time, and I take the time of the | young man, and you will come out
messenger to transfer the goods to I at tho right goal. Bring me a
my house, while in the other case j young man, and tell mo what his
I take none of the time of the incr- physical health is, and what his
chant, and I wait upon myself, and | mental calibre, and what his hat
lome. Have a Bible on the stand
I transfer the goods without any j its, and I will tell you what captured his Bible, and you have ]
trouble to him ! In'other words, a j will not make five inaccu- J taken his strongest fortress. The if yo u can afford it and can play
sneak-thief is not so bad as a man .rate prophecies out of way is comparatively clear, and all on it ) mve au i,„tiument of music
who contracts debts he never ex- [ five hundred. All this makes me [ the gates of his soul are set ojwn in _ ft |’ mrp) or or ( , ()rnrt]
pects to pay. Yet, in all our cities
there are families that move every
May-day to get into proximity to
other grocers and meat shops and
apothecaries. They owe every
body within half a mile of where
they live, and next May they will
move into n distant part of the city,
finding a new lot of victims. Mean
while, you, the honest family in
the new house, are bothered day
SLAUGHTER OF YOUNG MEN.
Sermon of Rev. T. DcWitt Talmage,
of Brooklyn Tabernacle.
A* M ox to the lUojhtw.-iProTMb* vil. 12
Theye is nothing in the voice or
manner of the butcher to indicate
to the ox that there is death ahead.
The ox thinks he is going on to a
rich pasture-field of clover, where
all <j»y long he will revel in the
herbaceous luxuriance; but after
awhile the men and tljp boys close
in upon him with sticks nnd stones
and shouting, and drive him
through bars and into a door-way,
where he is fastened, and, with a
well-aimed stroke, the axe fells
him, and so the anticipation of the
redolent posture-field is completely
disappointed. So many a young
man has been drawn on by tempt
ation to what he thought would be
paradisaical enjoyment, but after
awhile influences of a darker hue
and swarthier arm close in upon
him, and he finds that instead of
making an excursion into a garden
he has been driven “as an ox to
the slaughter.” '
We are apt to blame young men
for being destroyed, when we ought
to blame the influences that de
stroy them. Society slaughters a
great many young men by this be
hest: “ You must keep up appear
ances; whatever bo your salary,
you must dress as well ns others;
you must wine and brandy as
many friends; you must smoke os
costly cigars; you must give as ex
pensive entertainments, and you
must live in as fasbionnblen board
ing-house. If you haven’t the
money, borrow. If you can t bor
row, make a false entry, or subtract
here and there n bill from a bundle
of bank bills; you will only have
to make the deception a little
while; in a few months, or n year
or two, you can nmke it all right.
Nobody will be hurt by it, nobody
will be the wiser. You yourself
will not be damaged.” By that
awful process a hundred thousand
men have been slaughtered for time
nnd slaughtered for eternity. Sup
pose you borrow. There is nothing
wrofig about borrowing money.—
There is hardly a man in the house
but hns sometimes borrowed mon
ey. Vast estates have been built
on a borrowed dollar. But there
are two kinds of borrowed money
—money borrowed for the purpose
of starting or keeping up legitimate
enterprise nnd ex|M>nso, nnd money
borrowed to get thnt which you
can do without. The first is right,
the other is wrong. If you have
money enough of your own to buy
a coat, however plain, nnd then you
^orow money "for a dandy’s outfit,
you have taken the first revolution of
the wheel on the down grade. Bor
row for the necessities—that may
be well. Borrow for the luxuries—
that tips your prospects over in the
wrong direction. Tho Bible dis
tinctly says, “ The borrower is ser
vant to the lender.” It is a bad
state of things when you have to
go down some other street to es
cape meeting some one whom you
owe. If young men knew what is
the despotism of being in debt
more of them would keep out of it.
What did debt do for Lord Bacon,
with a miml towering above the
centuries? It induced him Intake
bribes and convict himself as a
criminal before all ages. What did
debt do for Walter Scott ? Broke
his heart at Abbotsford. Kept
him writing until his hand gave
out in paralysis to keep the sheriff
away from the pictures ami statu
ary. Better for him if he had
minded the maxim whicli be bad
chiseled over the firc-plnce at Ab
botsford, “ Waste not, want not.”
What did debt do for Robert
Bums ? Drove him to hard drink
ing, and to begging fur seven
pounds and four shillings to pay
fbr a volunteer’s uniform. Wiiat
did debt do for I.ord Byron and
his mother? She died in a fit of
rage from reading the upholsterer’s
bill at Newstead. William I’itt,
with genius enough to control the
fiuances of the English nation,
could not control his own finances, i Certain lines of conduct always t ho V.l i a irii, t li i it no, the niliowon
and went from one mortification to lead out to certain successes.— which be died. Cursed be debt!
another, and after death ttic l'arlia- There is a law which controls even l or the sake of your own bapjiiness,
ment voted $200,000 to nay th<‘ those things that seem haphazard. f°r the H«ke of good morals, for the
debts of that man who had received l have been told of those who have ^ Jounf M ^
$30,000 salary annually. The observed that it is possible to cal- j imesible, keep out of it I
vunsuirh %ftnvtim.
I5KUNSWICK, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER IS, 1880.
?2 00 A YEAR.
But I think more young men are each of your bunds for your own
ruined for want of religion. Take * defense. Wait not for Young Men’s
away a young man’s religion and ' Christian Associations to protect
you make him the prey of evil.— you, or churches to protect you.—
We all know thnt the Bible is the Appealing to Clod for help, take
only [.erfect system of morals. Now, | care of yourself,
if you want to destroy the young; Kirst—haven room somewhere
man’s morals, take his Bible away. j that you can call your own. Wheth-
HoW will you do that ? Well, > on' ,,,• u be the b*ok parlor of a fash-
will caricature his reverence for the ^ ioiinlsle hoarding house, or a room
Scriptures. You will take all those. in tile f ourt |, stwy of „ chcll p
incidents of the Bible which can i r ,g ( [ ( . aro not, only have that one
he made mirth of—Jonah’s whale, yoar tatUm. Let out .the
Samson s foxwi, Ailarn s rib. 1 licsc j dissijiuter or unclean step over the
ty of the past and the eternity of you will caricature eccentric Chris.| tl ir e»holtl. If they come up the
the future. Head the right way, tinns or inconsistent Christians.— I | ong flight of sfairs nnd knock at
Then you will pom off os. your own j t ho door, meet them face to face
all those hackneyed arguments aml Uinilly ye , firl „l v refuso t | )cm
against Christianity which are ns j admittance. Have a few family
old ns Tom Paine, as old as Vol- j portraila on the Wl)11 ifyou brought
taire. ns old ns sin. Now, you have, tla .; u wU h you from your country
solicitous in regard to young men, invitation to tho sins of earth and lodeo(1 or violil)) or pjano Eye
nnd I want to make them nervous | the sorrows of death, that they may , norning y(JU lt . av( , that roonli
and drive the stake for
come in mm unvc u»e siukc mr Kvery night you come home
their encampment A steamer flf- L ^ roonij |lray Make thnt
teen hundred miles from shore. L , m aibndtor. your Sebns-
with broken rudder and lost com- Mount Zion. Let no
pass, and hulk leaking fifty gallons bm| lxx , k or newBpa , M:r in(o
an hour, is uetter off than the (|mt ro()m any tlian
young man whom you have robbed |* wouI(I n |, ow ft ’ cubra t()
of the Bible. Have you ever no
in regard to the contraction of un
payable debts. I give you a para
graph from my own experience:—
My first settlement as pastor was
in a village. My salary was $800
and a parsonage. The amount .... v —, — - ----i mat room any more man you
seemed enormous to me. I said to young man whom you have robbed | # wou j ( j n u ow Cu b ra to crawl on
myself, “ What! all this for one of the Bible. Have you ever your tu l,l e . Take care of yourself,
year?" I was afraid of getting j ticed how dwpicably mean it is to i NotKX | y e)g0 will lake care of you
by day by the knocking at the worldly under so much prosperity ! | lake away the world’si Bible with- Vour help will not come up two,
door of the disap|H>intvd bakers, 11 resolved to invite all the oongre- out proposing a substitute? It I* or three or four flights of stairs.—
and butchers, and dry goods deal-j nation to my house in groups of meaner than to come to a sick man Vour help will come through tho
era, and newspaper-carriers, and Uenty-fivc each. We lagan, and , steal his medicine, meaner tlinn na ,f f j own f mm heaven, from that
as they were the best congregation , to come to a cripple and steal his j „ tu)> l)l( , aix thousand years
in all tho world, and we felt noth- crutch, meaner than to oomo to a L fthe W(irll p a llist< , ryi never |, 0 .
ing was ton good for them, we piled , pauper and steal his crust, meaner trayc ,| „ younR ,j iall who trieel to
all the luxuries on the table. I, than to come to a poor man and I g^i an( ) a Christian. 1s t me
never completed the undertaking, burn his house down. It is the I i() n . ( , ar ,i t(l your n ,l verBe
At the end of six months l was in ] worst of nil larcenies to steal th ^ wor hll y cirotiintrtnncea. In passing,
financial despair. . I found that we Bible which has been crutch, t |, a t you are on n level now with
were not only weio without the sur- medicine, and food, and eternnl l thoao who nr,! flnnlly to succeed.—
plus of luxuries, hut we had a home to so many. What a goner-1 Mnr || my wor young man, and
struggle to get the necessaries, and j ouh nnd magnanimous business m- tllillk of it tllirty yeara r rom nmv .
I learned what every young man fidelity has gonointo! tbisvphtting y ou wi „ fin| , tl)||l who tllir .
learns in time to save himself, or| up of lifeboats, and taking away ofj ty yyara f rilll] „„„ ar( , t | lc mniion-
you are asked where your prede
cessor is. You do not know. It
was arranged that you should not
know. Meanwhile, your predeces
sor has gone to some distant part
of ihe city, and the people who
have anything to sell have sent
their wagons and stopped there to
Solicit the “valuable” custom of the
new neighbor, nnd he, the new
neighbor, with great complacency,
and with an air <»f nfllucnce. ord
the finest steaks, the highest-priced j too late, that you must measure the fire-escapes, and extinguishing of a * rf . H v f t j 10 coun ( r y | who are the or
sugars, the best of the canned fruit,• size of a man’s body l>efore you be- j lighthouses. I come out and hn J' u tnrs oT the country, who are the
ami perhaps all tho newspapers—
b)ujlc, Argus, Sun, Hcra'd, Tribune,
World, ami Timm. And tho debts
will keep on accumulating until be
tho deficit. Invited on all hands
to drink, and their exhausted ner
vous system seeming to demand
stimulus. Their religion carica
tured by the most of the clerks in
the store, and the most of the oper
atives in the factory. Tho rapids
of temptation and death rushing
against that young man forty miles
the hour, and he in a frail boat
headed up stream, with nothing
but a broken oar to work with.—
Unless Almighty God help them,
they will all go under. Ah ! when
I told you to take care of yourself, ftn voico * began to *1***. the fifty
ness, nnd when lie Raid to his coropnn-
“ Now, I want to wind this watch
as long ns I can, nnd then when I run
Rone I want you to keep it wound nn-
til it gets to my friend Dr. Doremus,
iu New York, and then he will keep it
wound until his life is done, nnd then
I want the watch to go to his youngest
son, my especial favorite.”
The great physician, no more than
any other artist, had made the violin
spenk, and ring, and weep, nnd langb,
nnd triumph—for it seemed when ho
drow the bow across the strings, as if
all earth and heaven shivered in de
lighted sympathy—the great musician
in a room looking off upon the sea,
nnd surrounded by his favorite instru
ments of music, closed his eyes in
death. While all tho world whs mourn
ing at his departure, sixteen crowded
steamers fell into line of funeral pro
cess iou to carry his body to tho main-
laud. There were fifty thousund of
his countrymen gathered in an amphi
theatre of the hills, waiting to hear tho
nloginm; nnd it was said when tho
great orator of the day, with stontori-
you
iiiiaunileratood me if you: ‘'■"“""nil i*-o|.le on the hilUi.lea
burst into tears. Oh, that was* the
I close of a life that had done so much
thought I meant you are todepend
upon human resolution, whicli may .. . al ... , . T «_
, . . , J to make tho world happy I But I have
be ilisaolyed in the foam of the j lo yoUi yo „ h(( if „, 0
wme-cup, or may he blown out wiih rj(( , lt> , h .i w «. a t»n.e
the first gust of temptation. Here scene compared with that which will
is the helmet, the sword of the greet you when from tho gnllnries of
Iiord God Almighty. Clothe your-' heaven the one hundred nnd forty snd
self in that panoply nnd you shall f° ,,r thousund shall accord with Christ
not he put to confusion. Hin pays ' n cr )'*ng, “Well done, thou good uud
well neither in this world nor in w,nrw,t *” nm1 tho i,,fln ®*ooa
the next, but right thinking, right I ll,ftt OD e " tb you p,,t * n mo,ion
believing and right acting will take (l ° ,u , n rnt * on ^
• , . ,i lllu inflmwore yon
you in anfety through Una life and llandBl yolireWMr , n aB
in transport through the next I
gin tocut the cloth for his coat. I to such people, hat arc you do-i ^ jj JC coun t rv> are # j} ie
When a young man willfully and j ing this for ?” “Oh,” they say “just nier( .| uinlH ,',f t h e country,
of choice, having the comforts of for fun. It is such fun to L ho are the great philanthropists
life, goes into the contraction of un- Christiana tr to hold on to their Lf thocount ry--m!ghtie*t in church
gets his goods, yn the dOth of next ; payable debts, he knows not into Bibles I Many of them have ' !in( | state—arc this morning on n
April, in the furniture cart. Now, J what he goes. The creditors get, loved ones and havy been told that j evv j w ith you, not an inch above
let me say, if there are any such (after the debtor, the pack of hounds, there is a resurrection, and it is VOUi ft „d in straitened cireumstan-
persons in the house this morning, i in full cry, and alas, for the rein- such fun to tell them there is no
y regard for your deer. They jingle his door bell be- rcsuricction ! Many of them have
•, you had better fore he gets up in the morning, | believed that Christ came to carry
if you have any
own conscience,
move to some greatly distant part
of the city. If, fyr instance, you
livo in South Brooklyn, move to
the Eastern District or Green point.
Or, if you live in this central part
of Brooklyn, move to New York or
they jingle his door-bell after he j the burdens and to heal the wouuds
has gone to bed at night. They | of the world, and it is such fun to
meet his as he comes off his front tell them they will have to'bo their
steps. They send him a postal
card or a letter, in curtest style,
teljing him to pay up. They attach
Jersey City 1 It is too bad that, his goods. They want cash or a
having hail all the trouble of con- j note at thirty days, or a note paya-
suming the goods, you should also j ble on demand. They call him a
have all the trouble of being dun- knave. They say lie lies. They
ned ! And let me say, if you find want him disciplined at the church,
that this picture is your own pho jThey want him turned out of the
tograph, instead of being in church hank. They come at him from
you ought to, be in the penitentia- this side and from that side, and
ry ! No wonder that so many of from before nnd behind, and from
our merchants fail in business !— | above and from beneath, and lie is
own saviours I”
Think of the meanest thing you
ever heard of, then go down a thou
sand feet underneath it, and you
ecs now. Those who die at the top
were born at the foot, llerschel
earned his living by playing on a
violin at parties, and in tho inter
stices of the play he would go out
and look up at the midnight heav
ens, the fields of his immortal con
quests. George Stephenson rose
from being the foreman in a col
liery to be the most renowned of
will find yourself at the top of a ii lt ; world's engineers. And those
stairs a hundred miles long, go to men who are to succeed aro on your
the bottom of tho stairs, and you level now. I sjieak to those who
will find a ladder a thousand miles | are complaining of their straitened
long; then go to the foot of the hid- anil hard circumstances. Those
der and look oil a precipice halt as who are at tli«; top at your age, nine believe from what this young man
far ns from here to China, and you out of ten of them will comedown.! told mp that your sounding the
never shall forget a prayer I heard
a young man make some fifteen
years ago. It was a very short
prayer, but it was a tremendous
prayer: “Oh ! Lord, help us. We
find it so easy to do wrong, and so
hard to do right, Lord help us.”—
That prayer, I warrant you, reached
the ear of God, nnd reached his
heart. And there are in this house
to-day one hundred men who have
found out a thousand young men.
perhaps, who have found out that
very thing. It is so easy to do
wrong and so hard to do right.
I got a letter last night, only one
paragraph of which I shall read:
Having moved around somewhat
I have run across young men of in
telligence, ardent striven after that
wiil-o-the-wisp—fortune—nnd o f
one of these I would speak. He
wns a young Englishman of twen
ty-three or four years, who came to
New York, where he had no. ac
quaintance, witli,H»arely sufficiency
to keep him two weeks. He had
been tenderly reared, perhnj* I
should say too tenderly, nnd was
not used to earning his living, and
found it extremely difficult to get
any position that he was capable of
filling. After many vain efforts in
this direction, he found himself on
a Hunday evening in Brooklyn,
near your church, with about three
dollars left of his small capital.—
Providence seemed to lead him to
your door, and he determined logo
in nnd hear you. He told me his
fiiicnct* wound up bunded
children, until watch nud c!
more needed to mark tho prog
cause time itself shall be no
He who said “Suffer littl
to como unto me” wns the g
dor of the gladsome fwist of C
and it is in His honor tlmt we uph
the feast and gladden the hearts of the
little ones he loved so dourly. It is a
pleasure to make their smiles brighter,
their laughter cherrier nnd more mu
sical. Let ns all, then,'properly cele
brate Christmas dav.
Now comes the season when the
yonnp mail on an eight dollar salary
bothers his brains to raise the stamps
to get Ids girl a twenty dollar liolidsy
present
As the Christmas tree i* bent so is
the youthful h>*nrt made glnd.
It Is a Well-known Pact
Among physicians that Biicbn, Jun
iper and Purera Brava in combination
arc the best remedies in tho world for
uny disease of tho Bladder or Kidneys,
uud that not less than one half of the
human family, both nude and female,
suffer from derangement of those or
gans, nud neglect or failure to nsc
proper remedies hurry many to un
timely graves. Numerous combina
tions have been tried for (travel, Brick
Dust Deposits, Bright's Disease, Weak
ness in Back und ilips, produced by
derangement of Bladder and Kidneys,
but none with suoh happy results ns
ltaiikin's Kxtruet of Huchti mid Juni
per. If you suffer from any diseases
of these organs, get s hottle--oue or
o will relieve yon.
Prepared only by Hunt, Iluukin k
Lunar, Atlmila, (la. Kohl by F. Joer-
fcer, druggist, Brunswick. novl4-eow
Ga., Aug. 24. 1877.
going to hear you that night wan Dk. C. J. Morrm—Dear Doctor—.
uiulouM&dly the turning point in We gave your *• Teethina '* (Teething
. . ,. e e . , . : * ...» Powders) to our little grandchild with
>118 life, for when lie went into jour tbe ' i( .„ weru
church he felt desperate, blit while almost magical, ctrininhi more tat-
listening to vour discourse his l>et- '*f , *** tr M from anything we ever
. . , lours very truly,
ter nature got the mastery. I truly j Joasra 8. Key,
Pastor of 8t. Paul Church.
ArorsTA. Oa.. Feb. 6, 1878.
I take pleasure iu saving that Iknve
. * , .. ’’ 1 w. ...... 8— iiaed Dr. Ifoffet'a Tektdina for my
meanness that would rob this world with ! Young man, go down to the brought him hack to his God whom infant with entire satisfaction. It ful-
They are swindled into bankrupt* I insulted, and gibbeted, and sued I of its only comfort in life, it« only j Mercantile Library and get some j he was so near leaving. I l )nrMsLs P for , wi!i 1 -h it H< H C,rn,,liMhM, ded 6
cy by these wandering Arals, these j and dunned, and swum at until-hc; jwaco in death, and its only hope i„ w ks, and read of w hat wonderful j T | 10 tkat „f multitudes I mUSSlm 1 * Csw bTstaflxh. '
nomads of city life. They cheat 1 gete the nervous dispopsia, gets >r immortality. mechanism God gave you in your : , h ho ' y.1, ’ nin j am |
who fits them for departure from they will lot him alone.” Oh, no.
the neighborhood where tho owe | Now they are watchful to see wheth-
everybody, when they pay the or there are any unnecessary ex-
debt of nature, the only debt they penaeg at tho obsequies, to see |,he hospital, others arc in Urecn-
cver do pay ! Now, our young whether there is any useless ban- j voo a, „ r rather their bodies are,
men are coming up in this do- die on the casket, to see whether | f„ r t hcir souls have gone on to ret-
some of them nrc in their father’s
or mother's house, broken down in
health, waiting to die; others are in
ribution. Not much prospect for a
young man who started life with
good health, and a good education,
and a Christian example set him,
and an opportunity of usefulness,
praved state of commercial ethics, j there is any useless pleat on the
ami I am solicitous about them.— shroud, to see whether the hearse
I want to warn them against being is costly or cheap, to sec there the
slaughtered oil the sharp edges of flowers on the casket have been
debt. You want many things you bought by the family or donated,
have not, my young friends. You to see in whose name the deed to who gathered all his treasures and r ^ ,
all have them if you have pa- the grave ta made out. I hen they them in one box, and then cause you havo so littlo to do with,; mad, sad l J o:1 un right
lienee,"and hoiiest'y.Vnd industryij^“ ck ‘ he ^" !ft hourehold^i'c »’ ut
- . J I >looks, the pictures, the carpets,
dropped it into tin: sea. Now, how
is this wholesale slaughter to be
stopped ? There Is not a |>erson in
the house hut is interested in tiiat
question. Young man, arm your-
you have read nlxiut, ami never cuuraged youug raau ! wouuded young Lw a reliable soil valuable alterative
again commit the blasphemy of mnn ! I commend you to Chriot tUi. " n< * 8 TDt * e <n<ttiurtie. Ti« rapidly in-
” , . ,, oreeeiag popularity attests tbe mine of
saying you have no capital to start 'ley. the Iwst friend a man ever Imd.— jt3 medicinal properties,
with. Equipped ! why the |>ooreet He meote yon this morning. Ton have Yoara reepeetfnlly,
young man in this house ig come here for Hi. hieing. De»H ^ *
equipped as only the G<*1 of the ; uot l ‘ ,e potion naiog in your *ml-,
whole universe ^ould afford to eauin a 11 dmne,y Lo,,k ,llt0 th °| Th*Jfollowing abort Utter from Dr.
fact* of Christ l Lift one prayer to J. D. Miloliell, a member of theGeor-
bun 1 hen his body w ft very poor r filthl>r . M Goi \ t to Jonr mother’s j L^gislaturr, is a y«ry strong en-
affair compared with hi« wonderful | Oot , aI|(l ihU mornioggt . t th e pardon-1 ^^ % ) lutckinmn d . ; x hrtT#
Boiii . Oh, that is what inaked me , jyg Wltioaing. Now, while I speak, you j nw( | your “Neurslgiue” ni|dflii<l it all
solicitoua ! I am not bo much mix- u r»> at the forks of the road, nod this von claim, a s^-cific for neuralgia and
ions about you, young man, be- ia the right road and that ia tbe wrong hradaoha. J. D. MiTfUEieL, M.D.
* * Rev. Dr. J. H. Dcvotie says: “I.
have been relieved by it of a severe at
tack of headache.”
as I am anxious about you because ro *^ . . . .. .
. tel , , I Last Sabbath morning, at tho dote
you have so much to risk, and lose |<rf ^ , Mw tl|e K „ M ,. Htch of
or gain. There is no class of per- (%he worJ | renowned v i u Uni»t, Olo
Bonn that bo stir my Bynipathies a.s | t||j j y un remcmlier ho died lust
young men in great cities. Not HUmme r in his island home off the coust
self l The object of my Bertnon quite enough palary to live on, nnd ,>( Xonray. That watch he hud wound
thin morning is to put a'weapon in [all the temptations that come from jnp day after day through his last ill-
Decatur, Drceml*>r to, 1879.
I was very ranch troubled jg4fh bed
bug*, wed applied the Rex Extermina
tor, and hate not l»e»*n troubled with
them since, nud have not n^u a live,
bug siucti, but many dead one*.
Ubo. Parsoho.